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Show II SUBSTITUTE FLOURS. H Old recipes may be used for yeasts and ft! quick breads by using tho following pro- M portions which arc recommended by the Hit Department of Household Science of the Hug National "War Garden Commission. Ban Yeast Breads. I Urn Somo wheat must bo used when making yea3t bread with all other floura with ril the exception of rye flour. At least from Ui twonty-flve to fifty per cent of other mM flours can be substituted for wheat. fl Tho following is a typical recipe for one Ijjj! leaf of bread, in which other flours arc IF substituted for wheat: One and one-half cupfuls of wheat flour, ml ono cupful of any other flour, as barley. KL oatmeal, graham, rice or buckwheat; Hjl r three-fourths cupful of mashed potato, one-half cupful of liquid, one-fourth yeast 1 cake, one tablespoonful of shortening. I ijf When making rye bread uso two and I one-half cupfuls of rye, one-half cupful all For graham bread use cne and one-half tf' cupfuls each of wheat and graham flour, j IV I For com bread use two cupfuls of corn- I meal and one cupful of wheat flour. H j When making quick breads no wheat H flour ia necessary. Buckwheat, ' rolled B oats, cornmcal, rico, graham, ryo and H barley flours may bo used alono or com-H com-H blned, using ono and one-half to ono and h three-fourths of ono to one-half to one-B one-B fourth of another, depending upon the ' ffi flavor that is to predominate, or using i one-half of ono flour to one-half of ante an-te A general recipe Is two cupfulo of anj II I flour, ono cupful of liquid, one tablespoon It ful of shortening, ono tablespoonful o: H I lupar, one egg, one-half tcaspoonful o Ml ealtand two tcaspoonfula of baklnj ii jjff WHITE SILK VEILS. Puro silk veils in whlto, rather coarse mesh, come in largo rectangular shape, to bo thrown gracefully over the brim of summer sailors; tho mesh, quite open over tho face and hat, grows finer at the bottom bot-tom of the veil, and a sprawling flower design Is woven Into this finer mesh. Theso white silk vcll3 give a dressy effect to tho sport or semi-sport costume, and they are very graceful, floating about In a summer breeze. Best of all, they may bo washed In soap and water and dried In ono's room overnight If pinned out while damp over a pillow they rcqulro no Ironing. Iron-ing. REPAIRING SHOES. To repair almost discarded shoes, cspo-'clally cspo-'clally children's shoes, when they havo a worn spot in tho sole, cut a piece of soft upper leather from old shoes, pasto on Inside In-side of shoo and It will last for come tlmo for play shoes. |